By Our Correspondent,
KAMPALA Uganda
Tension is building up among Ugandans residing along the Uganda-South Sudan border after South Sudanese authorities claimed ownership of more than 20 villages in Kerwa and Kochi sub-counties in Yumbe district.
The most affected households
are in Kaboro A, Keriwa, Kaboro B, Tiria, Sokokobidri, Pasara, Junjubita,
Mafuu, Ujuruko, Milia, Koloro, Woroworo, Oloko and Tinji villages all in Kerwa
sub-county.
Meanwhile, in Kochi
sub-county, the villages that are being claimed by South Sudanese authorities
include Fitina Mbaya, Alema, Milia, Feyo, and Gobiri.
James Gale, LC III vice
chairperson for Kerwa sub-county explains that over the past few months, South
Sudanese authorities have been forcibly allocating land to their people in the
affected villages, which are deep inside Ugandan territory.
According to Gale, the actions
of the South Sudanese authorities have displaced several Ugandan households
along the border. Rashid Kawawa Godson, LC III chairperson for Lori sub county
says that their preliminary findings indicate that the majority of the people
the South Sudan authorities are settling in the disputed border are refugees
from settlements in Uganda who run back to South Sudan over food shortages.
In July this year, United
Nations World Food Programme (WFP) together with the Office of the Prime
Minister (OPM) announced food cuts and a prioritization strategy for the most
vulnerable refugees in Uganda as needs outstrip resources.
Jackson Amule, the Kerwa
sub county councilor said that several Ugandans have decided to abandon their
homes due to fear of being captured by the South Sudanese authorities.
Amule called upon the Ugandan
government to engage their counterparts in South Sudan to resolve the border
conflict, which he says is affecting the implementation of government programs
like the Parish Development Model (PDM).
Yumbe District Woman
MP Melisa Avako has appealed to the displaced residents to remain calm and
pledged to table the matter on the floor of parliament for government
intervention.
For a long time, the two
countries have been embroiled in a dispute over the border stretching from
Oraba in Koboko district to Lefori sub-county in Moyo district, which has led
to displacement of several households and loss of property.
In 2009, President Yoweri
Museveni and his Sudanese counterpart President Salva Kiir Mayardir met in Moyo
district and agreed that farmers from both countries could utilize the vast
virgin farmland along the border without any party claiming ownership of the
land until the boundary between the two countries is redefined, which hasn’t
been done.
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